Subject: Reversibility of Paraloid B-72
Tietjen <lena-t [at] gmx__de> writes >I am working on a bronze object that has been consolidated with >Paraloid B-72 three years ago. This is my Diploma- project for >Object conservation at the Fachhochschule fuer Technik und >Wirtschaft in Berlin. I am asking myself now, if someone has >experienced that Paraloid B- 72 is not soluble after a certain >period of time. Although Paraloid does hardly change with time, it >might get irreversible after 10-20 years. Has someone tried to >dissolve Paraloid after more than 10 years? On several occasions I have dissolved B-72 which had been applied to wall paintings for considerably more than ten years, and in fairly hostile environments. The most notable examples were: (a) a wall fragment with "temporary" roofing, but otherwise exposed--over twenty years after application (b) a vault in a subterranean room subject to high humidity and water infiltration--over twenty years after application My most recent experience was wall paintings in a church which had been treated with B-72 and probably B-67 thirty-four years previously. In all cases the resins dissolved fairly readily using acetone, xylene or a mixture of the two. Mark Gittins C.B.C. Conservazione Beni Culturali Viale Manzoni, 26 Rome Italy *** Conservation DistList Instance 21:9 Distributed: Friday, June 8, 2007 Message Id: cdl-21-9-002 ***Received on Thursday, 31 May, 2007